Cisco launches new cloud security services

In the latest chapter of what it calls its "Secure Borderless Network" initiative, Cisco is announcing expanded reporting capability for its ScanSafe web filtering service as well as the addition of a data loss prevention option for the company's cloud-based email security service.

In the latest chapter of what it calls its "Secure Borderless Network" initiative, Cisco is announcing expanded reporting capability for its ScanSafe web filtering service as well as the addition of a data loss prevention option for the company's cloud-based email security service.

NewPage, a coated-paper manufacturer, uses ScanSafe to control web usage for thousands of employees and has been testing the new reporting tool for a few months and has seen a dramatic improvement.

"The old version just did basic reports, but the new version allows you to process a year's worth of data, using at least 87 different attributes, extremely quickly," says Paul Moorman, information technology strategist at NewPage.

Moorman says NewPage decided to block the vast majority of websites in China since it appears that country is an originating point for a very high level of viruses, and at this point there's no specific business need to have access to most Chinese websites. NewPage, which has about 7,000 employees, is gradually moving away from an MPLS-based network to use of Internet pipes. This has proven economical, and Moorman says he expects use of Internet-based hosted services to continue to grow at the firm.

Cisco also announced it's adding a DLP and encryption capability to its IronPort-based hosted email security service, which customers can use in lieu of installing the IronPort appliance on their own premises. The DLP service option for the cloud is based on the technology Cisco licenses from RSA and already added to the IronPort appliance last year.

Cisco says the new cloud-service option includes a way to transmit TLS-protected email from the customer's email server to a Cisco data centre, Cisco claims it will have 33 of these data centres globally by year-end, where the email would be filtered to make sure it doesn't contain sensitive information before re-transmitting it.

Moorman says he expects NewPage might try the Cisco email security service with DLP in the future, but noted the his company has a multi-year contract left to run with the Google Postini service, and that his contract with ScanSafe is actually through Postini. Cisco says there are no immediate plans to change the ScanSafe partner arrangements.

Pricing on the ScanSafe service typically runs $2 to $5 per user per month, and the DLP feature in Cisco's email security service costs between $1.25 to $1.50 per user per month.